Super Luminous Ic Supernovae: catching a magnetar by the tail
C. Inserra, S. J. Smartt, A. Jerkstrand, S. Valenti, M. Fraser, D., Wright, K. Smith, T.-W. Chen, R. Kotak, A. Pastorello, M. Nicholl, F., Bresolin, R. P. Kudritzki, S. Benetti, M. T. Botticella, W. S. Burgett, K. C., Chambers, M. Ergon, H. Flewelling, J. P. U. Fynbo, S. Geier

TL;DR
This study presents detailed observations of five super-luminous Type Ic supernovae, supporting the hypothesis that their luminosity is powered by energy from newborn magnetars rather than radioactive decay.
Contribution
It provides extensive observational data and a semi-analytical model demonstrating magnetar spin-down as the primary energy source for super-luminous Ic supernovae.
Findings
Tail luminosity decline consistent with magnetar energy input
Detection of helium in some supernova spectra
Magnetar energies and ejecta masses estimated from models
Abstract
We report extensive observational data for five of the lowest redshift Super-Luminous Type Ic Supernovae (SL-SNe Ic) discovered to date, namely PTF10hgi, SN2011ke, PTF11rks, SN2011kf and SN2012il. Photometric imaging of the transients at +50 to +230 days after peak combined with host galaxy subtraction reveals a luminous tail phase for four of these SL-SNe. A high resolution, optical and near infrared spectrum from xshooter provides detection of a broad He I 10830 emission line in the spectrum (+50d) of SN2012il, revealing that at least some SL-SNe Ic are not completely helium free. At first sight, the tail luminosity decline rates that we measure are consistent with the radioactive decay of \co, and would require 1-4M of \ni to produce the luminosity. These \ni masses cannot be made consistent with the short diffusion times at peak, and indeed are insufficient to power the…
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